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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1905)
A fetv years ago when tboywere operating cable cars up and clown , * i stoep hill In one of the 2\ew England cities , a middle-aged lady , who had inever seen them before , entered a car one day that contained only two other people , seating herself as near the con ductor nSj possible , and when he had collectedher fare she spoke to him and said : "Is this car perfectly safe ? " "I hope so , madam , " replied the con ductor. "Have you ever had accidents on this awful steep hill ? " "Well , " replied the conductor , "there hnve only been u few small accidents ; nothing serious. " "Where would I go , " she then in quired , "if this car should get away and go sliding down this steep hill ? " "Well , madam , " said the conductor , 'it would all depend on how you have lived your past life. " Philadelphia Ledger. - - - - - - Curo to Stay Cured. Wapello , Iowa , Sept. 11. ( Special. ) One of the most remarkable cures ever recorded in Louisa county is that of Mr. . Minnie Hart of this place. Mrs. Hart was in bed for eight months and when she was able to sit up she was nil drawn up on one side and could I' ' not walk across tho room. Dodd's Kid- 3ic.v 1'ills cured her. Speaking of her l * euro , Mrs. Hart sii's : "Yes , Dodd's Kidney Pills cured me nftor I was in bed for eight months. and I know the cure was complete for j that was three years ago , and I have j 1 i not been down since. In four weeks j ! | < from the time I started taking them I j l ? was able-to make my garden. Nobody , can know how thankful I am to be cured or how much I feel I owe to Dodd's Kidney Pills. " This case again points out how much the general health depends on the kid- npys. Cure the kidneys with Dodd's { Kidney Pills and nine-tenths of the j Buffering the human family is heir tc will disappear. PAYING FOR HIS BOARD That little "Kikki-tikki-tavvi" - - is not wholly a creature of the "Jungle Tales ; " that he makes life-saving ex cursions into the real , every-day world , I ! is shown by an incident described in Pearson's Weekly. A gentleman who Lad l 3en ill in India was lying on his col , eating fruit and biscuits , when all nt once he saw a little sharp-nosed , bright-eyed creature , looking some thing like a squirrel , come creephig slyly along the floor. He threw it a bit of banana , which at first startled it : but in a moment it thought better of it , and snapped up the morsel. The man kept on feeding the small animal until it grew quite friendly ; then , : is some one approached , it ran away. The invalid soon composed himself lor a nap. Just as he was dozing off some thing roused him. and he saw a horri ble sight What it was he himself de scribes. ! Creeping into the room from the ve- j randacoil after coil , was a huge hooded cobra , the deadliest snake in all India , more than seven feet long and as thick as a man's arm. I tried to call for help , but my voice was so weak it cculd uot have been heard in the next room. On came the snake , rearing up its horrid spotted head. It had already got to the foot of the bed and was just preparing to crawl up when I heard a "skirr" of tiny feet across tlu \flpor. \ and saw my squirrel-like rat friend. tt The brave little fellow never hesitat ed an instant , but went right at the cobra like a tiger , and gave it a bite that drew blood like a cut. Again and again he attacked the reptilet biting and biting and always escaping the enemy's blows , until he conquered and the cobra lay dead. Just as this hap pened the snake , in its dying throes , knocked a glass off the table , and 1ha attendants in the house , hearing the crash , came rushing in. My little rat-squirrel was a mon- goos. JL-robably the youngest general in tho I In world is a nephew of the late Shah of t.i Persia , a boy not yet 14 years old. He tl holds the rank of full general in the Per 11 sian army. 11m STRONGER THAN MEAT. ' lc A Jndcrc's Opinion of Grape-Nntu. A gentleman who has acquired a ju Y fllcial turn of mind from experience on ci the bench out in file Sunflower State cist writes a carefully considered opinion tl as to the value of Grape-Nuts as food. lie says : E "For the past five years Grape-Nuts > P2 has been a prominent feature in our tl- bill of fare. tlT "The crisp food with the delicious , re nutty flavor has become an indispens 01 > able necessity in my family's ererj'- day life. , "It has proved to be most healthful and beneficial , and has enabled us to to prietJoally abolish pastry and pies ta from our table , for the children prefer ci G"ape-Nut and do not crave rich and cim unwholesome food. in "Grape-Nuts keeps us all in perfect sc ; physical condition as a preventive of ot disease It is beyond value. I have been b > particularly impressed by the bene sc ficial effects of Grape-Nuts when used si by ladies who are troubled with face 6C ; blemishes , s-'kin eruptions , etc. It clears ir up the complexion wonderfully. "As to its nutritive qualities , my ex- pener.i-e 5s that one small dish of * Grnpo-Ni- superior to a pound of meat i'or breakfast , which is an im > portant ( "moderation for anyone. It ) satisfies the appetite and strengthens the power of resisting fatigue , while its use involves none of the disagree able oos5 o < iuences that sometimes fol : low a menti breakfast. " Name plveu by roslia ( V > . . Rattle Creek , Mich. f ff There's a reason. t OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS Ifome FoSice Needed. EARLY every photograph of the rioting In Chicago during the tirst weeks of May , when the teamsters' strike was in progress , showed a large proportion of the mob to be composed of boys and very young men. Snap shots of a fatal shooting affray revealed the fact that those who were scampering from the zone of danger were merely youths , not workingmcn nor re- \ sponsible citizens of any sort Of course it is not true that all , or nearly all , the trouble was made by them , but at the best they formed a shield behind which hoodlums worked unseen by the po lice. Their presence suggests the need of some such "home poiice force" as accomplished a wonderful breaking up of ! a mob in Chicago in the strike of 1S04. The mob , which was composed of about a thousand . men and boys , had been raging unhindered for two hours. j ' A deputy marshal had been kicked to death , scores of freight cars had been overturned , and much other dam age had been done. The police seemed powerless. All this while the mob was led by two very excited and noisy young fellows , the older not more than seventeen. At last they had attacked a switch tower in which two men were working. At tho head of the st'iirs sat a deputy marshal with a firearm. The mob at the foot of the steps and about the tower clamored. "Kill the scabs ! " was the cry. In a moment there would have been shooting. Sml- denly appeared upon the scene an enraged and muscular woman , brandishing a stout club. "Where's them two b'ys of mine ? " she shrieked. She caught sight of the two leaders , made for them , and lauded resounding blows across their backs. " 'Tis nice work for ye , " she exclaimed , "out here tear- In' up the tracks while I sit over a hot stove , kapin * dinner fer ye ! Come home , now ! " They hesitated not , but went , their mother after them with her club. The mob , deprived of lenders , hesitated , hoot ed , threw a few stones and hrwke up. A single member of the home police had vanquished it. Youth's Companion. The Strike Habit , HE strike habit is becoming a menace to the prosperity of a majority of the people of this country. The primary purpose of organized labor is to defend its membership from im position and to secure a fair day's wages for a day's work. A strike is only justified when it is necessary for the protection of the craft. Recently , however , a new class of strikes has developed. Since unionism made the fatal blunder of admitting un skilled labor to an industrial equality with workmen in trades where proficiency is acquired only by years of ex perience and training , many of the new unions have de veloped a disposition to go on strike at certain seasons .thout regard to whether the conditions justify such action. No interest suffers more severely than organized la bor from an ill-advised or unjust strike. The strike is a dangerous weapon , and should only be resorted to when necessity makes its use imperative. A strike that is in augurated merely because a busy season is approaching , and It is believed that employers will be compelled to assent to what they consider an unjust proposition in preference to sacrificing their business , is a distinct in justice to organized labor as well as a menace to the pros perity of a community. Chicago Journal. State Control of Marriage. O one can deny that the prevention of degener- v i < ? nmrh mnrp economical than HIP curp of conditions which arise from it. It needs 1,0 prophet or the son of a prophet at this late day to expound the truism. The difficult- to find and apply the preventive. Dr. G. Frank Lydston believes in controll ing marriage upon rational , scientific principles. He would extend the functions of the State and make it responsible for healthy and suitable marriages. He would also have exercise paternal control over the training of children , in order that they shall have sound minds in sound bodies. This confidence in the ability of the State to work mir acles in behalf of reforms that have baffled religion , philan thropy and individual effort is expressed with a surprising " disregard of history and human nature. It was pardon able in the Spartans to believe in the omnipotence of the State , for they had had little experience with social con- " -j VOICE CULTURE FOR SPARROWS A series of interesting experiments n which English sparrows have been aught to sing sweetly is recorded in he : American Journal of Psychology , ihe aim of Dr. Conradi. the experi- nenter , has been to determine what ire the conditions under which birds earn and cling to their traditional lotes. For this purpose he has taken ery < young birds of non-musical spe- 'ies and kept them entirely with song sters to determine whether they would hus acquire the musical notes. In July , 1803 , he put four fledgling Snglish sparrows Into the nest of a alr of singing canaries. Three of hem died , but the fourth survived. Chis one had already acquired a spar- ow chirp , but hearing thenceforth nly the notes of the canary , he went 10 farther with the language which vas his birthright. Instead he came gradually , when among the canaries , o give notes different from sparrow alk. Even when he was silent , if the -anaries were singing he could be seen noving his throat as if he were try- ng to form the sounds , much as a per- on inamlibly follows a song which an- ther is singing. At last these sounds egan to be audible , and increasingly so. He began to give notes in rapid iuccesslon , three or four tones up the cale , and then repeating the top note ive or six times. Growing bolder with practice and he sound of his own voice , he soon ndulged three or four runs in succes sion , with eight to twelve notes in ach and in the last * ; dajs of Septem- er , when three months old , he went ip and down and up the scale all in me run. All this while his voice had been hauging. At tirst it was harsh , as is mtural with English sparrows ; but rradually , with the effort or with the ditions. Plato drew up the plan of a republic where all marriages should be under the control of the Government and where children should be given to the State for nur ture and trainicbut that was twenty-five hundred years ago. Since that time plans without number Im e been tried of iKning the State act as mentor and guarrJinn over what concerns a family relation , its rights and duties , but a su perabundance of laws impossible to carry into effect has always defeated the high purpose in view. No doubt , marriages based upon scientific principles would result in a far better race of people than inhabit the earth to-day , but where is the State capable of managing with scientific accuracy affairs in which even those most interested Often make grievous mistakes ? And wherein Is the State better able to train children than the parents of the child , who , more than any one else , have the child's interests at heart ? Dr. Lydston sees many of the ills we suffer under at present , but he ignores the train of ills that would come from shifting responsibility from the family to the State from those most interested to those most indifferent. Chi cago Chronicle. Sermons on Live Topics. HE ministers of Chicago preach more sermons on timely subjects than those of any other large city in the country. Battles , wrecks , murders , strikes events of every kind in which the pub 'SS ' SiL lic is interested furnish them with themes ! w 2MG5jJwitli | which to point a moral. While Chicago leads in this respect the practice of sermonizing on timely topics has become general among the pastor > of city churches within the last several years. Ministers who preach on timely subjects are sometimes criticised as "sensational , " but they follow old and revered examples. The sermons of the prophets of Israel were not dry bones. Elijah did not expend his time and ener gies elucidating doubtful texts in the writings of Moses. He preached * against the idolatrous worship of Baal and de- noiiaced Iving Ahab's and Queen Jezebel's wickedness to their faces. The sermons of Isaiah and the lamentations ot Jeremiah likewise dealt with the misfortunes and the folly of their immediate contemporaries. The preacher on live topics has a still better example. The Savior lashed the hypocritical Pharisees and the avaricious money changers of his time with stinging sarcasm. In Chicago , ' and doubtless elsewhere , the ministers who preach on timely subjects I raw the largest crowds. They do so because their sermons are the most interesting. The great end and aim of preaching is to teach people what is right and get them to do it. But before the minister can do this he must get himself heard. There has been a good deal of discussion as to why many city people do not go to church. The main reason probably has been that many preachers have not striven to keep in touch with the peoplo in the struggling , playing , sorrowing world about them have not kept informed as to what men were doing and thinking and , consequently , have failed to provide in their sermons the kind of intellectual and moral pabulum for which their congregations were hungering. I'reachers who strive constantly to keep up in their lives and their ser mons with the thought and life of their time seldom com plain of lack of hearers. Chicago Tribune. "Yah" and "Yep. " HE simple English affirmative is becoming somewhat battered in common speech. "Yes. " has long sounded as "yus" from the lips of the uneducated. But there is a present tendency among the educated to adopt the American variants upon the world. America has found that an open vowel or a labial is easier to pro nounce tli a n a sibilant. And it has two substitutes for "yes. ' One of them is "yep" and the other is "j-ah. " Ob viously the "yah" comes through the influence of the simple German "jawhich is quite an elemental sound. "Y.ep , " on the other hand , is clearly a protest against the waste of time in getting tongue , palate and teeth in a position to hiss. Phonetic laziness is what the late Professor Max Muller would call it. And within the last week the present writer has conversed with half a dozen men of culture and position , three of whom "yah'd , " while the other three "yepped. " We have all heard sermons to the young on the importance of learning to say "no" which is easy but will the pulpit thunder warnings to those who will not say "yes ? " London Chronicle. sub-conscious influence of the sweeter sounds about him , it became softer ami acquired something of the canary quality. At first he sang on a low scale and tried the top notes vainlj * , but as Jus voice became milder he went higher more easily. He was three months old when , growing bold , he essayed his first trill. It was short , but musical , and he evidently liked it , for he re peated it , and continued steadily to practice it It was done modestly , and after each trill he sat still and appear ed to be listening. A year later , how ever , when the report was being writ ten by the experimenter , he had grown to be quite an adept in canary song , and would trill and sing continually , punctuating his song with complete circles and semi-circles on his perch. To try tho effect of association upon him , Dr. Conradi removed him for a time , in his first year , from the canar ies , and put him where he heard onlv sparrow chatter. Gradually he ceased to sing and began to return to the neglected sparrow tongue , but whon he was again hung with the canaries he regained all he had lost in less than a month. Not Everybody. Nordy I should think Astorfeller would get discouraged. Butts Why so ? Nordy Everybody's abusing him. Butts Not on your life. He gets more than 500 letters a day from peo ple willing to accept his coin. Louis ville Courier-Journal. Pun Ahead. "Beware ! " cried the fortune teller , your bitterest enemy will shortly cross your path. " "Hooray ! " yelled the man , delighted ly , "my auto won't do a thing to him. ' Philadelphia Press. The line under the horse's tall causes more runaways than automo biles. I THE TRUTHFUL CAMERA. ± \ p I The tintype man had found a re munerative field in Ashton. When the summer boarder arrived that year at Willow Farm , she noticed that the , parlor mantel was adorned with star- ing , large-sized tintypes of all the Jen- 0 < j kins family. "He charged us overprice , and b they're fearful plain , aren't they ? " ' said Mrs. Jenkins to her guest. "But ln they've done us a sight of good. " u "Yes , " said the young woman , vaguely , "I suppose they might" "Lawzee , dear child , there's no rea- j , son you should know what I mean , " interrupted Mrs. Jenkins. "But you nt take a family of folks living on a a- farm , and growing old together , same an as Ab and Jane and Henry and I are , M and we don't notice little ways we've s1 got into. But the night after we had those taken we stood 'em up in a row , . and looked at 'em. tj " 'Do I chew my mouth down to the ro left that way ? ' said Ab. K " 'Is my forehead any such bed o' ly wrinkles as that ? ' said Jane. fr " 'Do I commonly squint my eyea lu up like that ? ' asked Henry. ! " ' And every time the rest of us , pul is j to it truthful , had to say yes. So . ' . .t we've sot 'em up there on the mantelt | piece to kind of remind us. I thinh some time , maybe , we'll have regulai photographs taken in Nashuy that ] ' would show our failing ? still betterA Mrs. Jenkins removed her own liketo ness from the mantel , held it at a dis tance , then brought it close to her | j'1 ' eyes : then she held it appealingly to ward the summer boarder. "The rest of 'em are faithful , but . mine I haven't got any such a cant u . to my eyebrows as that , one up and , i0 one down , now have I ? " she asked , jj with much anxiety. Youth's Com & ' panion. MOB EULE IN TOKIO. MARTIAL LAW IN CAPITAL OF ISLAND EMPIRE. Crowds of Japanese Uattc ! with Police and Apply Torch to Much Valuable Property National Troops Are Called Into Service to Quell Disorder. For days and nights mobs have filled the streets of Tokio , the capital of Japan , and clashes with the police have been fre quent. Four lives have been lost , GOO persons , of whom 200 are policemen , have been injured and much property has been destroy- ed. Ten Christian churches and one | mission school- I ' house were burned ( < r'trrearvrrnrj lftgt Jlight E. n , , MABQV1S 1TO. IIan.iman ? presl. I ' dent of the Southern Pacific Railroad , ' has been threatened , and Marquis Ito , 1 president of the privy council , has been i i stoned by a mob , but neither was in- j jured. National troops , called out for j service in the war. have been put on duty in checking the disorder , the po- , lice force having proved unequal to thec. t task. I I After the attack on the office of the . Kokumin Shimbun , the government or"V | I gan , Tuesday , a mob attacked and burned the official residence of the 1 minister of home affairs , which stood between the Nobles' Club and the Im- perial Hotel and faced Hibiya Park. which was the storm center throughout the day. Threatening demonstrations occurred ' in the neighborhood of the official . homes of Premier Katsura and Baron - Komura , foreign minister , who is now j in the United States , but the police succeeded in preventing injury to the occupants or damage to the houses. The destruction of the home minisSJ tor's residence was intensely dramatic , Throughout the day a series of demonb | strations took place in the neighbor- i hood of the building , and late in the . afternoon the mob attacked the house , j swept the police away and battterod , down the gates. The police and serv-1 ants resisted stoutly , but the mob ! surged forward and entered the house. One ot" the mob leaders carrying an armful of burning straw gained th j rear of the structure and succeeded in setting it on lire. The police reserves j charged the crowds , using their swords freely , but the mob rallied from sev eral quarters and skmed the firemen when they arrived. The members of I the minister's household were rescued and escorted to the Imperial Hotel. Accurate figures of the casualties in these encounters are not obtainable. It is known , however , that one man was killed , that fourteen were mortally wounded by sword thrusts and that many persons were bruised with stones and injured in the crushes. A member of the mob which burned , the home minister's residence said to a correspondent of the Associated Press : "We burned the house for the pur pose of attracting the attention of the ' ' emperor. . We want him to refuse to ratify the treaty. We believe that those surrounding him prevent him from correctly understanding the popu lar attitude toward the disgraceful , ; humiliating peace. " sh An imperial ordinance establishing thi martial law in Tokio was issued. It m is reported there is rioting at Chiba. a * town with a population of 20,000 , ' pa twenty miles east of Tokio. The pro- fectorate building and the court house are reported to have been burned. The government has suspended the further $ publication of the Niroku. a newspaper j gr printed : in Tokio. I shW QUAKE SPREADS DEATH. ' Violent Shock in Calabria , Italy , Delas , stroys Towna and Ends Livca. , Earthquake shocks , in the province of - Calabria. Italy , are reported , with an "W. 531 estimated loss in life of 100. The towns ! Fc of { Martirano. Pizzo and Monteleou di Calabria ; were almost entirely ruined. The jrre-itest damage appears to have been done at Stefaconi , where the dead are said to number close to the century mark. Almost every house in the town was wrecked , burying the people ill the ruins. The villages of Piscopio and Trip.mii were destroyed. At Martirano al the buildings have collapsed , includ ing the barracks of the gendarmes. Piz/.o. Momeleone , Martirano and the other plan's mentioned in the dispatches ahaving been dum.i ed or destroyed by earthquake are towns in the extreme .southern part of Italy. They are situ ated on the Peninsula of Calabria , which TH for the most parr is rough and moun tainous. The region is reached by a rail and road running .southeast inm and south along U& the , coast from Naples to Kejrjrio on the U&L route to Sicily. Pizzo is a town of about U&A 10.0UO inli.ilntantfc and is located direct A ( > u the line of the railway 200 miles S'7 from Naples. It k built on a sandstone lock on the coast. Monteleone is a mountain town ol lli.OOO inhabitants and s.tuate.l soniimiles from the coast. Martirano is alsi > a mountain town in , < interior < if Calabria. It has less than ri.OOO Kih.ibitants. Vesuvius. \ \ hich has been in extreme activity during the las-t ten days , is only 'jr > miles from Cnt.mzaro , while Mount Aetna , the l , ftie < t volcano of Europe , toners ii Sicily only ninety miles away. The LIpnr : Islands , ju t \\e < tof the Caia- ln-'a department , contains the volcano Stromb. II. ttireatcriinjr and active always. J. C. S.nery. owner of the famous C.iMe mine and well known in Iowa ! b.uikin ; ; circles and in Wall street , ia de.id at his residence at Cable , Mont. Hear : di.st-asc was the cause. He was ycad old. NOISES III HER HEAD Mrs. Reagan v/as a Nervous But Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Brought Sound Health. " Before I began to take Dr."Williams' Pink Pills , > f said Mrs. Mary Reagan , of No. 86 Kilburn street , Fall River. Mass. , recently , "I was in and ottt of ! bed all the time , bnt now I stay up all' day and do all my own work. "I was badly nm down from over work. One day noises began in my head and almost made me crazy. My head felt as if a tight baud had been pufc around it , and the pressure and th sound's made me so uuensy that I ofteu had to walk the floor all night. " My stomach was in bad shape , and I bad omothering sensations. At such times my body seemed bloodless , my * hands were like chalk and my face turned yellow. The doctor sanl I had' dyspepsia in the worst ibrm. I'heu my nerves gave way and I was completely prostrated. I frequently suffered from smothering sensations. " The first box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills that I used quieted my nerves GO that I could get a good night's sleep which was a new experience for me. Before I began to use them I was J nervous wreck and trembled at the slightest sound. I was so weak that I had to sit down and rest every few steps wken I went up stairs. Now I can run up a whole flight at once. The smother ing sensations have gone and the noises in my head have stopped entirely. My appearance has greatly improved , for friends who were alarmed on my ac count . ( ' before , now .say : 'How well you ar'e looking ! ' My husband spent over a hundred dollars on treatment for me that & ? S tvonfhless , but a few boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills brought me sound health. " ( Sold by all druggists , or sent , post paid , on receipt of price , 50 cents per box , § ix boxes for 02 50 by the Dr. "Wil liams Medicine Co. , Schenectady , N. Y. Marrying on Account. Rev. Mr. Williams was the Congre gational minister in the village ot Winslow , Me. , several years ago. One evening , says a correspondent of the Boston Globe , four young people called , at the parsonage. Two of them wished te be married. The papers in the case were legal , so Mr. Williams performed the cere mony. The other couple acted as bridesmaid : and best man. The groom was the son of a well-known man ini the town , and as the happy coupla' ' were leaving the parsonage the young , man whispered to Mr. Williams : "Just charge it to father , parson. It will be all right. " 1 W. L. DOUGLAS \ S3' i ? & * 3i SHOES W. L. Douglas $4.OO Gilt Edge Lino cannot be equalled at any price , f,1 < Jnly 6 , 1876. > W.L.DOUOLAS MAKES AND SELL * ' MORE MEX'S $3.50 SHOES THAU ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. < Mfl flfin REWARD to any one who can $ I UjUUU disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their er- ellent style , easy fitting , and superior\vearfne > qualities , achieved the largest sale of any S3.5O shoe in the world. They are Just as good mm those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 the only * difference Is the price. If I could take you into ray : factory at Brockton , Mass. , the largest lot theworld under one roof making men's fina shoes , and show you the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made , you wou Id realize why | W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced in the world. I If I could show you the difference between tho shoes made In my factory and those of other makes , you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make , why they hold their shape , fit better , wear longer , and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W L. Douglas Strong Ufa tic Shoes fof fffon , $ S.SOr $2. GO. Boya' School M Brass Shoca$2.5O , $2 , $1.75r$1.5O C i A UTION. Insist upon liavins W.L.Dopg. shoes. Take no substitute. Xone gentiim without his name and price stamped on bottom. " \VANTED. A shoe dealer in evpry town tvher * . I. . DOUKI.T ? Shops are not sold. " Full line ol samples sent free for inspection upon request. Fast Color Eyelets used ; they will not wear brassy. Writo for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Style * \V.L. ] DOUGLAS , Brockton , Mass. A , PLEASANl ? NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRK3HT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor 17 * It mcti gentlr on th stomach. HT T kidney * and 11 m ple&ant laxative. Thi drink J * innde from herbi. sod ia prepared for CM u e&aUj M & . It is called " .Lane'i Tea" o ? LANE'S FAMILY MEDICINE All drnitgiftte or by mail 35 ct . and 50 cts. Bny it t 7. J.ane'n Family jlledfclne mores tb bowels each day. In order to be healthy Ihiaia AddrM. O. F. Woodward. L + Hoy. if. Y. WET WEATHER COMFORT "I have used your FISH BRAND Slickerforfive years and can truth * fully say that I never have had anything give me so much com fort and satisfaction. Enclosed find my order for another one. " ( NAME AMO ADDRESS Ol APPLICATION ) You can dsfy the hardest storm with Tower's \Vaterproof \ Oiled Clothing and Hats OUR GUARANTEE IS BACK OF THIS SIGN OF THE FISH co. BostonTu. S. A. 70WER CANADIAN CO. Limited TORONTO. CANADA eo